Ok, I’ll have to test this with my whit SilkieOnly if the white is dominant white and not recessive
Thanks!Breeding blue to black should produce half blue and half black offspring. When breeding blue to blue you will statistically get 25% black, 50% blue, 25% splash. So from the perspective of breeding blue to blue it could seem as though the black was hiding in the blue.
The chart that 3KillerBs provided is a good reference for color.
If both of your breeders are are silkie without the frizzle gene the offspring will just be silkie. Two silkies don't produce smooth feathered offspring and as long as there is no frizzle gene in either parent the offspring will all be silkie, no frizzles or sizzles.
Is it true if you breed a black Silkie to a white Silkie you get a paint? Thanks
I don't understand what is usually considered paint, unless it is simply a derivative of dominant white. I have had discussions concerning it and it seems whoever and myself that is in the discussion are never able to connect on whether it's a derivative or a seperate gene. I know how dominant white works, but from the discussions it seems I don't understand paint. In my breeding endeavors I have gotten chickens that in appearance look like the paint silkies, but they came from my dominant white birds and when they were bred to solid colored birds they produced just like the normal dominant whites do.
I'll have to leave that to the silkie color experts. Here is a silkie thread.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/silkies-they’re-simply-spectacular.1334299/post-26551705